MH 370
Anyone of you following the case closely?
The plane shuts off its radar system, and continues to fly for 7 hours, on a changed course.
Malaysia doesnt send its fighter jets to go and get the plane, as any normal country would.
No country's radar system detects an anonymous plane.
Nobody sees the plane from the ground.
No plane passes by.
No debris is found(Assuming its crashed).
No ransom call is made(assuming its highjacked)
And if it were to crash it in some building like they did in the 9/11, they would have done it then and there, rather than wait for the whole world to be suspicious.
Somewhere, something doesnt fit.
The plane shuts off its radar system, and continues to fly for 7 hours, on a changed course.
Malaysia doesnt send its fighter jets to go and get the plane, as any normal country would.
No country's radar system detects an anonymous plane.
Nobody sees the plane from the ground.
No plane passes by.
No debris is found(Assuming its crashed).
No ransom call is made(assuming its highjacked)
And if it were to crash it in some building like they did in the 9/11, they would have done it then and there, rather than wait for the whole world to be suspicious.
Somewhere, something doesnt fit.
The plane transformed into a submarine and is now located in a secret underwater base.
I'm convinced it's in the sea. It's not too surprising that they haven't been able to find any parts (yet); it's a pretty big ocean.
What happened on that plane, though, I wonder? A terrorist takeover that went south? Some kind of severe malfunction which would kill their communications? In that case, the course change would make most sense if they were aiming for the nearest airport, or simply the shoreline. I haven't been looking into this thing very closely, so I've no idea if that's the case.
It also wouldn't surprise me if someone shot the plane down, and is simply trying to weasel out of the responsibility now.
Star Fox: So that unidentified flying object we just obliterated was a passenger plane with 200 people aboard? S***
^ that has happened before in the past, sadly enough.
What happened on that plane, though, I wonder? A terrorist takeover that went south? Some kind of severe malfunction which would kill their communications? In that case, the course change would make most sense if they were aiming for the nearest airport, or simply the shoreline. I haven't been looking into this thing very closely, so I've no idea if that's the case.
It also wouldn't surprise me if someone shot the plane down, and is simply trying to weasel out of the responsibility now.
Star Fox: So that unidentified flying object we just obliterated was a passenger plane with 200 people aboard? S***
^ that has happened before in the past, sadly enough.
Still that doesnt explain turning off the communication system, and flying for 7 hours, and still not making an attempt at distress landing.
Yeah, it's definitely a bit funky. This looks like a pretty good summary of what is known, for those who haven't been keeping up: (scroll down to the part with the maps)
http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/03/18/flight-mh370s-diversion-was-manually-programmed-into-cockpit-computer/
http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/03/18/flight-mh370s-diversion-was-manually-programmed-into-cockpit-computer/
There are over 600 locations where a Boieng 777 could've landed within that timespan, the news are crazy about it.